do evil games expect evil prizes, thank you Rainer Forst

edit: this is a pedagogical post, not a philosophical one. i actually fully agree with the paradox of tolerance and its conclusion! i just find that it doesn’t work as well as an educational tool for introducing people to the concept. sorry for any confusion :)

  • Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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    8 days ago

    It’s called a paradox because it is unsolveable… if you are a free speech absolutist.

    The point he’s getting at is that absolute tolerance is not only bad; it’s impossible. A society that tolerates absolutely everything - the kind free speech absolutists claim to envision - will inevitably become less and less tolerant over time, because the intolerant members of that society will abuse those freedoms to create more intolerance.

    Its framed the way it is because Poppler is essentially responding to those people who invoke the slippery slope to argue that you cannot ever censor anything, because then how do you decide what not to censor? Poppler replies “Here’s how.”

    If it helps you to frame it better, call it the “paradox of absolute tolerance” or the “paradox of perfect tolerance.”

    • spujb@lemmy.cafeOP
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      8 days ago

      totally. thank you for your insight and i fully agree for the record.

      but you needed four paragraphs to explain the “paradox”. that is a surefire signifier that is maybe not rhetorically the best fit for the role of convincing people deplatforming nazis is good…

      again, i’m criticizing the tool. i’m fully in alignment with what it does, there’s just so many better ways to say it.